QUOTE (LurkerOutThere @ Feb 7 2010, 10:35 PM)

Man just when i was loosing hope that this thread would deliver Smokeskin comes in and restores my faith like a textbook example we have.
-Nice vague statement of own proficiency
-Unsupported belief in own arts superiority(based on "situational awareness" no less, extra bravo)
The rest of you need to step it up a notch while i get more pop corn I will be very disapointed if someone doesn't say they don't spar because their style is too extreme (the usual statement of Krav and *shudder* ninjitsu fighters) and someone else needs to declare their willingness to fight anyone any place, any time, any where (irony intended)
I made no statements about my own profiency, because I wasn't trying to make a point about myself, and I didn't make any claims about an arts superiority.
I was highlighting the differences between two very different systems, that were brought up above and I happen to have trained both (well, it was boxing and I did thai boxing). A muai thai boxer will be very good at 1 on 1 fighting, if a bit hampered by his gloves only training and no ground fighting. A krav maga practitioner will by comparison be significantly weaker in 1 on 1 combat, but he'll have for example much better situational awareness.
You also seem to think that situational awareness can't be trained. Just a few things they did at krav training, warm up always had some awareness element. For example, we'd be split by some difference in appearance like hair color, everyone with light hair tries to hit those with dark hair in the back, and vice versa. Everyone is then running around, checking their backs, moving to avoid the opposition, trying to find a way to get to enemies without exposing yourself. Other warmups, you'd run around chaotically in a space that just fit all of us and try to squeeze through tight spots between people, to teach you to escape quickly through crowds. During training, every drill, you end it with looking behind your back and running away. And most of the time when doing drills, there are instructors or other students walking around, ambushing people from behind - so everything you do, you learn to check your six and be ready for additional attackers from behind.
I might add I did the civilian krav maga - different versions are taught for different applications, like law enforcement or military.
Krav maga certainly does teach you situational awareness. When something goes wrong, a krav student will check his back, and he will escape very quickly - that's what he's done during training, 2-3 quick hits, then you turn and run. A thai boxer might know to do it too, but he won't have those reflexes drilled into him - at best, he's going to be slower and less proficient at it, at worst he's going to drop into his usual habit of a regular, stand up fight with focus just on the guy in front of you.
If you want to compare that to SR4 martial rules, I think it works out quite well (even if disagree on the exact bonuses). Sure, the PC might know what to do, but the guy who has been putting a lot of hours into perfecting certain aspects of fighting, he'll get a bonus for those situations.
If you really want to bring up my own profiency, I've trained martial arts for a combined 4 years, the majority of it nearly 15 years ago, plus some scattered sparring from time to time. I also did some karate and aikido when I was a kid, but that was so little and I was so young and the styles so ineffective, I don't believe it counts. I've had my ass kicked around the ring by many people, compared to trained fighters I'm not even average. Compared to people with no real training, including bullies who think a few bar brawls make them tough, I'm a combat machine. After a few fights when I was younger, it made me feel invincible because it was so easy, until I ended up in a 5 vs 1 which didn't go too well - I was doing well for a few seconds until someone pulled me to the ground, and with 4 of them still standing, I couldn't really recover from that. I consider myself lucky I learned that lesson by some decent people who didn't jump on my head, or by meeting a guy with a knife or a broken bottle.
If you want to argue superiority of the arts I practiced, the widespread use of krav maga by professionals speaks for itself, and it deserves its reputation as one of the best self defense system. I believe everyone also realizes the need to crosstrain to improve your 1 on 1 fighting skills, and that you need to do it against people who don't just do krav maga because they're just not skilled enough at sparring. Muai thai is considered very superior too, but obviously it lacks ground fighting - I'd need to add some BJJ or similar to become a rounded fighter. If you want to argue that kickboxing and MMA are also "superior systems", I'm not going to disagree just because I happened to not have trained those. But I did train some systems that are among the "best ones", unlike TKD and karate, which is more gymnastic than applicable to actual fighting. Martial arts just aren't equal